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1.
The complete primary structure of a base non-specific and adenylic acid preferential RNase (RNase M) from Aspergillus saitoi was determined. The sequence was determined by analysis of the peptides generated by digestion of heat-denatured RNase M with lysylendopeptidase, and the peptides generated from RCM RNase M by digestion with staphylococcal V8 protease or chemical cleavage with BrCN. It consisted of 238 amino acid residues and carbohydrate moiety attached to the 74th asparagine residue. The molecular weight of the protein moiety deduced from the sequence was 26,596. The locations of 10 half cystine residues are almost superimposable on those of RNase Rh from Rhizopus niveus and RNase T2 from Aspergillus oryzae which have similar base specificity. The homology between RNase M and RNase Rh and RNase T2 amounted to 97 and 160 amino acid residues, respectively. The amino acid sequences conserved in the three RNases are concentrated around the three histidine residues, which are supposed to form part of the active sites of these RNases.  相似文献   

2.
Purification and properties of bovine kidney ribonucleases   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Two RNases (RNases K1 and K2) were purified from bovine kidney by means of column chromatography on phospho-cellulose, Sephadex G-50, CM-cellulose, heparin-Sepharose, nd agarose-APUP. They were named RNase K1 and RNase K2 in order of elution from the heparin-Sepharose column. The purity of RNase K1 thus obtained was about 90% by SDS-disc electrophoresis. RNase K2 was purified to homogeneity by SDS- and pH 4.3 disc electrophoresis. The yield of RNase K2 was 3.4 mg from 11 kg of kidneys. The antigenic properties of the two bovine renal RNases were studied by Ouchterlony's double diffusion analysis. RNase K1 and RNase A were serologically indistinguishable. RNase K2 did not cross-react immunologically with RNase K1 or RNase A. The molecular weights of these RNases determined by gel-filtration on Sephadex G-50 were 13,400 and 14,600 for RNase K1 and RNase K2, respectively. The pH optima for RNase K1 and RNase K2 were 8.5 and 6.5, respectively. Both RNase K1 and RNase K2 were as acid stable as RNase A. RNase K2 was less heat-stable than RNase K1 and RNase A. Although both renal RNases were pyrimidine nucleotide-specific enzymes, RNase K1 and RNase A were more preferential or cytidylic acid than RNase K2. The chemical composition of RNase K2 was determined. RNase K2, like human urinary RNase Us, contained one tryptophan residue. The N-terminal sequences of RNase K2 and RNase Us were determined by Edman degradation. Rnase K2 had a homologous sequence of about 10 amino acid residues with the sequence of RNase Us, a typical non-secretory RNase, within the N-terminal 30 residues.  相似文献   

3.
Lentinus edodes (shiitake) cultivated in potato dextrose medium produced five RNases in the culture filtrate. The two major RNases (RNase Le37 and RNase Le45) were highly purified and their molecular masses, base specificities, N-terminal amino acid sequences, and amino acid compositions were analyzed and compared to RNase Le2 isolated from the fruit bodies of the same mushroom. RNase Le37 and RNase Le45 are base non-specific and adenylic acid preferential RNases like RNase Le2 and their N-terminal sequences are very similar to RNase Le2, but they are glycoproteins and their amino acid compositions are significantly different from that of RNase Le2. In addition to these enzymes, a guanylic acid-specific RNase with a molecular mass 13 kDa was partially purified. Since RNase Le2, which has very similar N-terminal sequence to RNase Le 37 and RNase Le 45, was not excreted from the mycelia, the analysis of the structures of these two excreted RNase may shade a light on the mechanism of excretion of RNases in this organism.  相似文献   

4.
RNase T2 bound to an affinity adsorbent, 5'-adenylate-aminohexyl-Sepharose 4B, specifically at pH 4.5. The colorless enzyme was eluted only by the simultaneous addition of 2'(3')-AMP (1 mM) and NaCl (greater than 1 M) at pH 4.5. By applying this affinity chromatography to the purification of RNase T2, pure enzyme with a specific activity of 60 was obtained in only four steps and the yield was about 10 times higher than that of the previous purification method. This enzyme preparation was found to be heterogeneous in molecular weight and was separated into two fractions on Sephadex G-75 gel filtration. As the smaller enzyme with a molecular weight of 36,000 was identical with RNase T2 in every property examined, we tentatively designated the larger one with an apparent molecular weight of 80,000 as high molecular weight RNase T2 (RNase T2-L). RNase T2-L was still heterogeneous and was separated into five fractions, RNases T2-L 1-5, by repeated Sephadex G-150 gel filtration. The amino acid and carbohydrate analyses revealed that each of these fractions has a protein moiety in common with RNase T2 and the heterogeneities were due to the carbohydrate content, mainly galactose content.  相似文献   

5.
Two acid RNases were purified from bovine spleen by means of ammonium sulfate fractionation, chromatographies on-phospho-cellulose, heparin-Sepharose CL-6B, poly G-Sepharose, and 2', 5'-ADP-Sepharose, and gel filtration on Toyopearl HW 55F. Both purified preparations were homogeneous as judged by disc electrophoresis at pH 4.3. They were designated as RNase BSP1 and RNase BSP2 in the order of elution from a phospho-cellulose column. RNase BSP2 was immunologically indistinguishable from RNase K2 from bovine kidney. RNase BSP1 was a typical pyrimidine base-specific, uridylic acid-preferential RNase and had very sharp pH optimum at 6.5. RNase BSP1 thus obtained was a glycoprotein giving two major bands on SDS-slap electrophoresis. Although the apparent molecular weight of RNase BSP1 was distributed in the range of 27,000-20,000, it decreased to about 17,000-18,000 after endoglycosidase F digestion. The N-terminal amino acid sequence up to the 20th amino acid had no homology to those of RNase K2 and RNase A.  相似文献   

6.
The complete primary structure of a base non-specific and adenylic acid preferential RNase (RNase Le2) from the fruit bodies of Lentinus edodes was analyzed. The sequence was mostly determined by analysis of the peptides generated by V8 protease digestion and BrCN cleavage (including alpha-chymotryptic, and V8 protease digest of BrCN fragments). It consists of 239 amino acid residues. The molecular weight is 25831. The location of 10 half cystine residues were almost superimposable on those of known fungal RNases of the RNase T2 family. The sequence homologies between RNase Le2 and four known fungal RNases of the RNase T2 family, RNase T2, RNase M, RNase Trv, and RNase Rh, are 102, 103, 109, and 74, respectively. The homologous sequences are concentrated around the three histidines, which are supposed to form the active site of RNase T2 family RNases.  相似文献   

7.
Three ribonucleases (RNases) with different molecular masses were isolated from human kidney. The enzymes were purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state, and their respective molecular masses were found to be 18,000 (tentatively named RNase HK-1), 20,000 (RNase HK-2A), and 22,000 (RNase HK-2B) on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Analysis of the amino acid compositions, amino-terminal sequences, and enzymological properties of the enzymes indicate that RNase HK-1 is related to "nonsecretory" RNase, and that RNases HK-2A and HK-2B are both related to "secretory" RNase. Furthermore, RNase HK-1 showed cross-reactivity with an antibody specific to nonsecretory RNase from human urine, whereas RNases HK-2A and HK-2B showed cross-reactivity with another antibody specific to human urine secretory RNase. However, the carbohydrate compositions of RNases HK-2A and HK-2B were markedly different from that of the secretory urine RNase. This finding seems to indicate that the kidney is not the origin of the urine enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
D L Blithe  C A Buck  L Warren 《Biochemistry》1980,19(14):3386-3395
Glucosamine-labeled glycopeptides from control and virus-transformed BHK fibroblasts were characterized by size, lectin affinity, charge, and composition. As already demonstrated, on the basis of elution position on a column of Sephadex G-50, transformed cells contained a greater proportion of large glycopeptides than did control cells. Transformed cells also contained a larger proportion of glycopeptides which do not bind to Con A-Sepharose. By sequential chromatography on Sephadex G-50, Con A-Sepharose, and DEAE-Sephadex, approximately 40 individual peaks were partially or completely resolved. If sialic acid was removed from the glycopeptides prior to analysis by ion-exchange chromatography, 95% of the glycopeptides from control cells and 85% of the glycopeptides from transformed cells were no longer bound by DEAE-Sephadex. It was concluded that the DEAE-Sephadex elution properties of the glycopeptides are determined almost entirely by the sialic acid content of the molecules. A comparison of the profiles of control and transformed cell glycopeptides simultaneously eluting from columns of DEAE-Sephadex revealed that the differences between the two cells were largely quantitative; however, the possibility of the existence of qualitative differences as well cannot be excluded. In particular, there was one component present on the surface of transformed cells that was virtually absent in control cells. It was degraded by nitrous acid hydrolysis and heparinase and appeared to be heparan sulfate like material. After fractionation, each isolated glycopeptide population was analyzed for carbohydrate and, in some cases, amino acid content. The apparently larger glycopeptides, group A, the dominant population in transformed cells, were found to contain 3 to 4 mannose residues/glycopeptide when the sugars were normalized to sialic acid content. On the basis of the same criteria, group B glycopeptides contained 4-6 mannose residues/glycopeptide. The carbohydrate and amino acid compositions of the glycopeptides from transformed cells were, with a few exceptions, similar to those from control cells. Some isolated glycopeptides appeared to contain both O-glycosidic anad N-glycosidic linkages on the same oligopeptide.  相似文献   

9.
In order to elucidate the structure-function relationship of RNases belonging to the RNase T2 family (base non-specific and adenylic acid-preferential RNase), an RNase of this family was purified from Trichoderma viride (RNase Trv) to give three closely adjacent bands with RNase activity on slab-gel electrophoresis in a yield of 20%. The three RNases gave single band with the same mobility on slab-gel electrophoresis after endoglycosidase F digestion. The enzymatic properties including base specificity of RNase Trv were very similar to those of typical T2-family RNases such as RNase T2 from Aspergillus oryzae and RNase M from A. saitoi. The specific activity of RNase Trv towards yeast RNA was about 13-fold higher than that of RNase M. The complete primary structure of RNase Trv was determined by analyses of the peptides generated by digestion of reduced and carboxymethylated RNase Trv with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, lysylendopeptidase and alpha-chymotrypsin. The molecular weight of the protein moiety deduced from the sequence was 25,883. The locations of 10 half-cystine residues were almost superimposable upon those of other RNases of this family. The homologies between RNase Trv and RNase T2, RNase M, and RNase Rh (Rhizopus niveus) were 124, 132, and 92 residues, respectively. The sequences around three histidine residues, His52, His109, and His114, were highly conserved in these 4 RNases.  相似文献   

10.
In the present study the structures of two glycopeptides (G1 and G1'), isolated from FU RvH(1)-b and two glycopeptides (G2 and G3), isolated from the structural subunit RvH(1) of Rapana venosa hemocyanin, were determined. To structurally characterize the site-specific carbohydrate heterogeneity and binding site of the N-linked glycopeptide(s), a combination of capillary reversed-phase chromatography and ion trap mass spectrometry was used. The amino acid sequences of glycopeptides G1 and G1' determined by Edman degradation and MS/MS sequencing demonstrated that the oligosaccharides are linked to N-glycosylation sites. Two peptides (a glycosylated (G1) and non-glycosylated one) were identified in this fraction and no linkage sites were observed in the latter one. Based on the sequencing of the glycosylated fractions G1, G1', G2 and G3, the carbohydrate structure Man(alpha1-6)Man(alpha1-3)Man(beta1-4)GlcNAc(beta1-4)[Fuc(alpha1-6)]GlcNAc-R could be identified for glycopeptides G1 and G3, and only the typical core structure Man(alpha1-6)Man(alpha1-3)Man(beta1-4)GlcNAc(beta1-4)GlcNAc-R was found for G1' and G2. The Fuc residue found in glycopeptides G1 and G3 is attached to N-acetyl-glucosamine of the carbohydrate core, as often found in other glycoproteins.  相似文献   

11.
Base specificity and other enzymatic properties of two protozoan RNases, RNase Phyb from a true slime mold (Physarum polycephalum) and RNase DdI from a cellular slime mold (Dictyostelium discoideum), were compared. These two RNases have high amino acid sequence similarity (83 amino acid residues, 46%). The base specificities of two base recognition sites, The B1 site (base recognition site for the base at 5'-side of scissile phosphodiester bond) and the B2 site (base recognition site for the base at 3'-side of the scissile bond) of the both enzymes were estimated by the rates of hydrolysis of 16 dinucleoside phosphates. The base specificities estimated of B1 and B2 sites of RNase Phyb and RNase DdI were A, G, U > C and A > or = G > C > U, and A > or = G, U > C and G > U > A, C, respectively. The base specificities estimated from the depolymerization of homopolynucleotides and those from the releases of four mononucleotides upon digestion of RNA coincided well with those of the B2 sites of both enzymes. Thus, in these enzymes, the contribution of the B2 site to base specificity seems to be larger than that of the B1 site. pH-stability, optimum temperature, and temperature stability, of both enzymes are discussed considering that RNase Phyb has one disulfide bridge deleted, compared to the RNase DdI with four disulfide bridges.  相似文献   

12.
The role of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides for the mechanism of protein folding was investigated. We compared the stability and folding kinetics for two sets of pancreatic ribonucleases (RNases) with identical amino acid sequences and differences in glycosylation. First the folding of RNases A (carbohydrate free) and B (a single N-linked oligosaccharide) from bovine pancreas was investigated. The kinetics of refolding were identical under a wide range of conditions. The rate of unfolding by guanidinium chloride was decreased in RNase B. In further experiments the folding of porcine RNase (three carbohydrate chains at Asn-21, -34, and -76) was compared with the corresponding data for the deglycosylated protein. Even for this RNase with almost 40% carbohydrate content the mechanism of refolding is independent of glycosylation. Although the folding mechanism is conserved, the rates of individual steps in folding are decreased about 2-fold upon deglycosylation. We interpret this to originate from a slight destabilization of folding intermediates by carbohydrate depletion. In control experiments with nonglycosylated bovine RNase A it was ascertained that treatment with HF (as used for deglycosylation) did not affect the folding kinetics. The in vitro folding mechanism of glycosylated RNases apparently does not depend on the presence of N-linked oligosaccharide chains. The information for the folding of glycoproteins is contained exclusively in the protein moiety, i.e. in the amino acid sequence. Carbohydrate chains are attached at chain positions which remain solvent exposed. This ensures that the presence of oligosaccharides does not interfere with correct folding of the polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

13.
The complete primary structure of a base non-specific and adenylic acid preferential RNase (RNase Le2) from the fruit bodies of Lentinus edodes was analyzed. The sequence was mostly determined by analysis of the peptides generated by V8 protease digestion and BrCN cleavage (including α-chymotryptic, and V8 protease digest of BrCN fragments). It consists of 239 amino acid residues. The molecular weight is 25831. The location of 10 half cystine residues were almost superimposable on those of known fungal RNases of the RNase T2 family. The sequence homologies between RNase Le2 and four known fungal RNases of the RNase T2 family, RNase T2, RNase M, RNase Trv, and RNase Rh, are 102, 103, 109, and 74, respectively. The homologous sequences are concentrated around the three histidines, which are supposed to form the active site of RNase T2 family RNases.  相似文献   

14.
In most tissues, ribonucleases (RNases) are found in a latent form complexed with ribonuclease inhibitor (RI). To examine whether these so-called cytoplasmic RNases belong to the same superfamily as pancreatic RNases, we have purified from porcine liver two such RNases (PL1 and PL3) and examined their primary structures. It was found that RNase PL1 belonged to the same family as human RNase Us [Beintema et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 4530-4538] and bovine RNase K2 [Irie et al. (1988) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 104, 289-296]. RNase PL3 was found to be a hitherto structurally uncharacterized type of RNase. Its polypeptide chain of 119 amino acid residues was N-terminally blocked with pyroglutamic acid, and its sequence differed at 63 positions with that of the pancreatic enzyme. All residues important for catalysis and substrate binding have been conserved. Comparison of the primary structure of RNase PL3 with that of its bovine counterpart (RNase BL4; M. Irie, personal communication) revealed an unusual conservation for this class of enzymes; the 2 enzymes were identical at 112 positions. Moreover, comparison of the amino acid compositions of these RNases with that of a human colon carcinoma-derived RNase, RNase HT-29 [Shapiro et al. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7255-7264], suggested that these three proteins are orthologous gene products. The structural characteristics of RNases PL1 and PL3 were typical of secreted RNases, and this observation questions the proposed cytoplasmic origin of these RI-associated enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
The gene encoding RNase HII from the psychrotrophic bacterium, Shewanella sp. SIB1 was cloned, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant protein was purified and biochemically characterized. SIB1 RNase HII is a monomeric protein with 212 amino acid residues and shows an amino acid sequence identity of 64% to E. coli RNase HII. The enzymatic properties of SIB1 RNase HII, such as metal ion preference, pH optimum, and cleavage mode of substrate, were similar to those of E. coli RNase HII. SIB1 RNase HII was less stable than E. coli RNase HII, but the difference was marginal. The half-lives of SIB1 and E. coli RNases HII at 30 degrees C were approximately 30 and 45 min, respectively. The midpoint of the urea denaturation curve and optimum temperature of SIB1 RNase HII were lower than those of E. coli RNase HII by approximately 0.2 M and approximately 5 degrees C, respectively. However, SIB1 RNase HII was much more active than E. coli RNase HII at all temperatures studied. The specific activity of SIB1 RNase HII at 30 degrees C was 20 times that of E. coli RNase HII. Because SIB1 RNase HII was also much more active than SIB1 RNase HI, RNases HI and HII represent low- and high-activity type RNases H, respectively, in SIB1. In contrast, RNases HI and HII represent high- and low-activity type RNases H, respectively, in E. coli. We propose that bacterial cells usually contain low- and high-activity type RNases H, but these types are not correlated with RNase H families.  相似文献   

16.
The complete amino acid sequence of ribonuclease N1 (RNase N1), a guanine-specific ribonuclease from a fungus, Neurospora crassa, was determined by conventional protein sequencing, using peptide fragments obtained by tryptic digestion of cyanogen bromide-treated RNase N1 and by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion of heat-denatured RNase N1. The results showed that the protein is composed of a single polypeptide chain of 104 amino acid residues cross-linked by two disulfide bonds and has a molecular weight of 11,174: (sequence; see text) (Disulfide bonds: C2-C10, C6-C103) The amino acid sequence was homologous with those of RNase T1 (65% identity) and related microbial RNases.  相似文献   

17.
To determine the distribution of a kidney acid RNase (RNase K2) and other RNases, the levels of RNase K2, RNase A, and seminal RNase (RNase Vs1 in bovine tissues and body fluids were measured by enzyme immunoassay. The crude extracts of several tissues and body fluids were fractionated by phospho-cellulose column chromatography. The enzymatic activities at pH 7.5 and 6.0 and enzyme contents of each tube were measured by enzyme assay and enzyme immunoassay, respectively. In the pancreas, parotid gland, and heart, most RNase activity was due to a single peak of RNase A, but a small amount of RNase K2 was always observed. In the kidney, there was about 5 times as much RNase K2 as RNase A. In the lung, although RNase K2 and RNase A were the major components, there are another two alkaline RNase peaks. In the spleen and liver, there are four RNases, two acid RNases, one of which is RNase K2, and two alkaline RNases including RNase A. A new acid RNase (non RNase K2-acid RNase) from both organs was immunologically the same. In serum, there are at least four RNases. By partial purification of serum RNases by phosphocellulose and heparin-Sepharose column chromatographies, at least 4 RNases, RNase A, RNase K2 and the other two alkaline RNases, one of which is immunologically indistinguishable from liver alkaline RNase, were confirmed. The other serum alkaline RNase was immunologically related to lung and spleen alkaline RNases. In conclusion, in bovine tissues and body fluids there are at least 7 types of pyrimidine-base-specific RNases: brain RNase, seminal RNase, RNase A, RNase K2, an acid RNase (RNase BSPJ, an alkaline RNase (RNase BL4), and another alkaline RNase in serum.  相似文献   

18.
1. The carbohydrate compositions of human, pig and cattle transferrins and duck ovotransferrin have been determined. 2. Glycopeptides have been prepared from these transferrins and their carbohydrate compositions and amino acid sequences determined. One of the glycopeptides from human transferrin carries the C-terminal residue of the protein. 3. Each tranferrrin yielded two glycopeptides that appeared to be identical in carbohydrate composition but different in amino acid sequence. The two glycopeptides have been distinguished as type A, in which the residue following Asn(CHO)(where CHO represents a carbohydrate moiety) is a basic amino acid and type B in which Asn(CHO) is followed by a neutral aliphatic amino acid. Cattle transferrin is exceptional in having two glycopeptides in which this position is occupied by serine. 4. It is suggested that each molecule of human and cattle transferrin and duck ovotransferrin carries an average of two carbohydrate prosthetic groups. Hen and pig transferrins appear to carry only one carbohydrate group per mol of protein. 5. The N-terminal sequences of hen and duck ovotransferrins and of cattle, human and pig transferrins were also determined.  相似文献   

19.
Gametophytic self-incompatibility in plants involves rejection of pollen when pistil and pollen share the same allele at the S locus. This locus is highly multiallelic, but the mechanism by which new functional S alleles are generated in nature has not been determined and remains one of the most intriguing conceptual barriers to a full understanding of self-incompatibility. The S(11) and S(13) RNases of Solanum chacoense differ by only 10 amino acids, but they are phenotypically distinct (i.e., they reject either S(11) or S(13) pollen, respectively). These RNases are thus ideally suited for a dissection of the elements involved in recognition specificity. We have previously found that the modification of four amino acid residues in the S(11) RNase to match those in the S(13) RNase was sufficient to completely replace the S(11) phenotype with the S(13) phenotype. We now show that an S(11) RNase in which only three amino acid residues were modified to match those in the S(13) RNase displays the unprecedented property of dual specificity (i.e., the simultaneous rejection of both S(11) and S(13) pollen). Thus, S(12)S(14) plants expressing this hybrid S RNase rejected S(11), S(12), S(13), and S(14) pollen yet allowed S(15) pollen to pass freely. Surprisingly, only a single base pair differs between the dual-specific S allele and a monospecific S(13) allele. Dual-specific S RNases represent a previously unsuspected category of S alleles. We propose that dual-specific alleles play a critical role in establishing novel S alleles, because the plants harboring them could maintain their old recognition phenotype while acquiring a new one.  相似文献   

20.
Primary structure of an alkaline ribonuclease from bovine liver   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A pyrimidine base specific and most basic alkaline RNase named RNase BL4 was isolated from bovine liver as a protein showing a single band on slab gel-electrophoresis. The enzyme is most active at pH 7.5. The enzyme was immunologically distinguishable from the known bovine RNases such as pancreatic RNase (RNase A), seminal RNase, kidney non-secretory RNase (RNase K2), and brain RNase (RNase BRb). The primary structure of this pyrimidine base-specific RNase was determined to be less than EDRMYQRFLRQHVDPDETG- GNDSYCNLMMQRRKMTSHQCKRFNTFIHEDLWNIRSICSTTNIQCKNGQMNCHEGVVRV- TDCRETGSSRAPNCRYRAKASTRRVVIACEGNPEVPVHFDK. It consists of 119 amino acid residues, and is 5 amino acid residues shorter than RNase A. The sequence homology of RNase BL4 with RNase A is 46.2%, and optimal alignment of RNase A and RNase BL4 requires five deletions, one at the 24th position, two at the 75th and 76th positions, and two at the C-terminus in RNase BL4. The RNase BL4 was highly homologous with a porcine liver RNase (RNase PL3, 94.1% homology) studied by Hofsteenge et al. (personal communication from Hofsteenge, J., Matthies, R., and Stones, S.R.).  相似文献   

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